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Private equity firm KKR swings to $1.2 billion loss in 2008



01 June 2009 @ 10:40 am ET

NEW YORK - Private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co KKR.UL posted a substantial loss in 2008 as the global economic downturn took its toll on the firm's investments.


Private equity firm KKR swings to $1.2 billion loss in 2008
A businessman passes an electronic board displaying the closing price of Japan's benchmark Nikkei share average in Tokyo February 20, 2008. Japanese shares fell over 3 percent on Wednesday to their lowest in a week after a report that KKR Financial Holdings had delayed repayment of billions of dollars of debt, spooking investors into locking in profits. (Reuters Photo / Yuriko Nakao )
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KKR lost $1.19 billion before taxes last year, compared with pre-tax economic net income of about $815 million in 2007, according to a presentation by the private equity firm on Sunday.

"Economic net income" generally excludes the impact of income taxes, noncash charges related to vesting of equity-based compensation and amortization of intangible assets.

KKR said its averaged adjusted pretax economic net income from 2004-07 was $926 million.

The private equity industry has been struggling with numerous problems -- absence of leverage for new deals, troubled portfolio companies and investors hurt by equity market falls.

KKR, co-founded by "buyout king" Henry Kravis, has the added problem of having announced plans to take itself public just prior to the markets plunging.

KKR said total annual fee income fell 27 percent to $640 million in 2008. Total assets under management dipped to $48.5 billion from $53.2 billion.

The New York firm said it has $15.4 billion of uninvested capital across its three geographic funds: Europe, U.S. and Asia.

KKR released the information to provide investors with an update on its financial condition as it continues to consider buying out its Amsterdam-listed fund, KKR Private Equity Investors LP The deal would be key to KKR's plans for a U.S. stock listing.

KKR's plans to become a publicly traded company hinge on the deal to buy the KPE fund. If that transaction is scrapped, the listing would be thrown into question.

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

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